64 Throw them of the out es I I EALL Y you know, the guest-room reading table ) should not be a depository for mllseum pieces. ((Under the Red Robe," (<Richard Carvel," ((When Knighthood Was in Flower" were swell books in their day. Bllt they aren't exactly in the 1933 tempo. Y Oll must be quite stern about it. Throw them out of the guest-room. Retire them on a handsome pension if you like, bllt don't inflict them on your amiable guests. In their place yOll can have weekly T he New Yorker, sweetly attuned to the times, wise, witty, cheering inter- preter of the most fascinating city in the world and the most interesting people thereof. Grateful is your guest when The N,w Yorker is within easy reach. To sign the coupon below is to enhance your reputation as a thoughtful host. ---------------------------- -------- THE NEW YORKER, 25 West 45th Street, New York Please enter sttbscription to THE NEW YORKER as indicated' D One year, $5.00 D Two years, $7.00 To be sent to: Name Ad d res s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... ...... .............................................. ...... ............ ... .............................. for which I enclose check for $............ as indicated above Donor's Name ........................._ _ _ Address ........................... .... .... ............ ... ..... ............ ............ ............ ............ ... ... .... (Canada, 1 year $8.10, 2 years $13.20; Foreign, 1 year $6.00, 2 years $9.00) SEPTEMBER 16, 1933 9-16 prize pig and a malicious manuscript 'divide the honors. W odehouse is W odehouse. ALL MEN ARE ENEMIES, by Richard Alding- ton. l\.. carefully written romance, but some will find it pretty sentimental, too. U nfail- ingly interesting, however. LITTLE MAN, WHAT Now?, by Hans Fallada, translated by Eric Sutton. A touching and humorous story of the fortunes of a lovable couple caught in the web of the present crisis. May become the "Uncle Tom's Cabin" of the depression. GENER.AL W HAT WOULD BE THE CHARACTER OF A ;.JEW WAR?, by eighteen experts. A coldly ob- jective survey of what lies in store for you, ll1e, and the children, as disclosed by a group of Geneva authorities, many of them sol- diers. THE JOURNAL OF GAMALIEL BRADFORD (1883- 1932), edited by Van Wyck Brooks. The extren1ely interesting record of the mental career of one who found his only satisfaction in other people's lives. THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME, by H. G. Wells. The history of the next two hundred years, done with considerable imaginative power. Very entertaining. SFEDS OF REVOLT, by Mauritz l\... Hallgren. Subtitled "A Study of American Life and the Temper of the American People During the Depressiorl." First-hand observation. and not very New Dealish. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ALICE B. TOKLAS. The Gertrude Stein n1yth neatly debunked by Gertrude Stein. Very amusing, but does Gertrude know it? THE CRIME OF CUBA, by Carleton Beals. A vigorous indictn1ent of our Cuban policy and a remarkable exposure of the real conditions lying back of the headlines. ...A..nd a very vivid job of writing. THE UNTRIED CASE, by Herbert B. Ehrmann. A bombshell by the junior counsel for Sacco and Vanzetti. It teIls you how the Braintree murder was committed and who really did the job. What says Massachusetts? THE FIRST W ORLD WAR. A photographic history edited, with an introduction and captions by Laurence Stallings. By general consent the most n10ving and in1portant of the war books. With 513 telling photographs. TWENTY YEARS A-GROWING. by Maurice O'Sullivan. A remarkably beautiful and genuine autobiography of an Irish peas- ant youth. MY STERIES CRIME DE LUXE, by Elizabeth Gill. A trans- atlantic liner provides a suitable background for rich. refined crime There's nothing much in it, however, to distinguisb it fro111 the long list of similar mysteries. THE CASE OF THE SULKY GIRL, by ErIe Stan- ley Gardner. Another case for Perry Mason, the hardboiled lawyer who is turning out to be one of the most interesting detectives in the mystery field. If you like your plots swift and closely knit. this is one you cer- tainly can't omit. NIGHT OVER FITCH'S POND, by Cora Jarrett. Five people in a remote summer camp pro- vide enough dynamite for an excellent and beautifully 'written story. It has no detec- tion and no sleuth, but builds up to an un- beatable c1 imax. THE W ARRIELA W JEWEL, by Winifred Peele Presenting one of those decaying Scotch families whose members are so eccentric that they just naturalIy store up trouble for themselves. It is worked out very logically, without undue horror. . IN ACCORDANCE WITH HISTORICAL precedent, and in deference to the \vishes of the Irish people, the approved pro- nunciation for the surname of the und'er- signed \vill again be McN amar'a on and after June 15, 1933. R. C. McNam'ara Jr. D. McC. l\1cN am' ara, Chicago. -Adv. in the Ti,nes. Somebody has to accede to the wishes of that people.